Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
: 20l T ;
46, Sevetith Btrest North
m“l; W Bditor
Teibsetiption Price—Dally
Per 1flfi'%w....... K]
Thred, MOBLUS .vinvnrnrepeswe 170
& W
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ST e
mmmmn o
1879, o eAL P y
am o The Asssciated Préss
Y P
:&r org"b eradited in fifi“&.v
Bow ond’ tn‘loul nows publish
BiBLE 5 FOR THE DAY
6 LORD;Z DELIGHT—*“I{ the
Lord dlight ” "wh .be wil!
bring ub into this land and give it us*
a land pwhigh floweth with milk and
honey. PO M- S
in cofés the sedson tor June brides
Qfi. thihg right the . We
#re Justs fiodshing : . tiod
sedaon. § I kg, 35 | to miake yp
R aide, 10 iy .:
- o Py T .
The B¢ ::"‘ N éuv'.“',
openea o R*Hid Ay &rounst 1n Ty,
Al Fia SO sk o thotsand|
.kmaxny brats ywarmed the tield
o opetn My~ .
If the republican bodses would let
Pregident Coolidge alotie in hls desl.
I 8 with the world court, the erms
conferenes \gld b,‘% debt settle
ment, hwu ‘out of it so
far in erfor, His' Metorial Ddy td-l
dress yutol‘&irnntlbd that he L}
save 00 thess tapues iu Apite of poli
tics. ; NI word br fiIGNHILy ih'
fl‘ fobn ‘Wifich ‘stadds . out and
2@ ll}lyfl ly is \.v@hy of comi“
o QR JEAITT o L
. Todl man ‘ who *'sént . the ' bomy
‘.-" o 5 2 . a Tl {
throug® the mells; uwm,;nd'
e yom'ufiz , har Hange, and
ugr her, has “copteasdd and naw
soBs. n}l’lollll'gQr lite. . We could not
Ak « more criminal, s more das
srdivll more cowardly way to ftight
ailosflis ' game- in pokitics, Wonder
what ‘o".((nhs think of a life term
tor & @4O 11ké Uris who ought 10 make
a}Wte@eht line for the executioner's
c?fin : 1
TR ‘
. ;
3§ THE NEW JuDaE
‘fl ors Hirrls and George can ho
st to know about Tlson. The
lezal Baternity of Georgla cannot help
profing their fight agalnst Tilson
tor .t federal judgeship in the naw
aistrifl in Gyoryip:, Senator George
sdys BB is purely a matter of polmcp‘i
add st likely that e it . . .
‘Theiieorgia district might not have
over Bep sonroned b or e 10
flh‘ B e .(,v;\m. '-fié;repub".
cdb pyisy Jomer .bouse is 8
biothd¥ of the Georgla Tilson who is
sbeiinf® the judgeship. That man will
bé ablh to gitemy thofief 6o Geor
gians fedm&d becatse of his
n'pml “pull’. .. And. that isn't any
80t off correct procedure.
‘Wesre not expécting anybody but
' rapablicart’ buf we have s ‘right to
Abfic one. who cah perform the serv
iges. @'béy say Joé Tilson tsu't quall:
h&l‘;t oy ! ' _
| RE WORK, LESS PLAY
A er Babson told the Ocala
"Rot§ey Clud that Florida's great.
L ast meed L i ‘more respect
!Hor nnl:h,;fip for knmick
:&u'i.m thiuks"théré 18 too much
" golfand not enough sure enough
worlf'in that State.—Exchinge.
RN take ¢ man with more im.
r command in" his vdice than
oger '_bq”‘_ that respect
whteh qyaralla need. Therd {s 8o much
fi\l.th jimdt thet we are disposed to
; ll’ that Flotlda ian't the only
ufate whete there would ‘still be a
wug Ok truth In the assertion. Most
Wl{' are too prome to tesume that
Flort f is a play ground. It s, but
thav's!for thosh Who have made their
tortudps.
:‘l‘lp poor man and the working man
-«;’si:}tho man who wpuld' lay up for
a ral day must still keep his close
“mm:"“ 014 Man Work,
M'QUIGE 1S WRONG
In a Memoria) Day Address in Day.
ton Brigadier Géfieral John R. Mc
Quigg, national commander of the
American Legion, sald among other
things:
“Many of the tién whom we miourn
as fallen_on the battlefield or dead
after long auttetthg of the wounds
they got 1o thelr pérvice In time of
contlict might have been spared.” the
national head of the Legion declared,
“hed we 'nucte‘} proper scieme of
ibie national detenss, istead of listen
ing #atter @ach Of our wats to the
teachings of those who preached
trines of pacificism 4nd non-resist.
ance,” ;
“The American Legion ean render
no greater servick to the country,” he
sald, “thah to tight the insiduows un
dermining of het national defense by
the ultra‘pacifist movetnent.”’ |
" This man has & program lata out
that is @ll wrong. The greatest, most
worthy thought that an American cit
'lzen ‘can bave today 14 that of world
peace~—pertoanent padce for the na:
tions. He bas been trained to study
war and make plans for beating oppos
@‘ma in. contiigt. , His (Alm s
6aLer, defensy, , grogter gngines of
war, more effective means of conquer
tng avmies in buftle, grégter urories,
votfer - triilied “bmmiiees-a ' veritable
brigtiiag S4tion Fohdy {o et “fire “in
the powdiel flwfi'fitm first in.
timation of insult or.ffijury trom an
other people. His argument is to be
ready to edforce the will of this na
tion wherever qud whenever there is
@ wish of atiother people running coun
tér. He dreams of making prepara.
tion so terrible that no other power
will Jare set itself against anything
this great ndation Bedires. He cares
nothik about expérise—war when we
will to make wat b his life study.
. ‘That's what makes wars possible—
Hothing elab fs so dangerous ‘to ‘the
Deate of'the world. That'drew Ger
many into & fight against the rest ‘of
hb cibsieed y«p&. That thing along
mgde the Germah war lords believe
they could' conquet. They had' stud:
fed: ""t i‘hfi ‘d gudo«-n‘ep‘mtlon
torly yeabs—spefit o much time and
money dt It till the wide world knew
the conflict was coming. It did come.
Nothing 1n the powet of peace-loving
peoples could have prévented it.
'We have st outselves another task.
That duty 18 to sét up a world court
through which differences among na
tions may be tried and given ap equit:
able disposition. Nothing of that kind
in alj history hax before been possible
to have. That tourt is slowly but
ateadily Ealning the respect of the
Ameéricah people. WlBk men are turn
ing that way, and though we are in it
through the back dootf, and barely lis
teners, iwe are there trying to De
lgve that it will. bting peace many a
time whare force and arms might be
brought to beat otherwise.
The court is not the only agenty.
The Jeague ts an agency of peace. A
disturbing power Which is disposed to
use force now- has to fight the whole
league when it gobs to war. As the
years add, prestige to the league, its
dicmel\';.\v‘lfl bave more power. That
can only ‘twean that a nation whose
military prowess and secret treaties
which heretofore have made its war
lords bantering cocks of the war pits,
Wwill have to tight the whole league
when it goés to war. With the civil
ized world backing the league and the
world court, thosé war makers who
rear and prance @aily in their eager
hess to throw meh #nd cannon into
blovdy tields, will have to think some
before they go tb battle. |
There is nothing wtong with such a
pacifist progrem. Great agencies
which force war fakers to take their
grudges to tribuslals of peacetul set
tlement will turd the whole course of
things—and all but national wealth
then way hot bé éxpended in war—
and &)l our man power, . .
e A e e e S “
Members of the woman's civic club
have Intimated that one of their prin
cipal aims in the near fiture is to
have the play grohtids in the parks of
Cordele fitted with suitable equip
ment for the children. This is indeed
a worthy cause and ought sometime
to find enough hold upon the minds
of thiose who cafl do it craditably to
becomé & real accomplishment. There
{s no argument that can make us be-
NEW LIGHT ON DAIRYING
. The dairyman cannot rely on pas
ttre alone for milk and make money
by dolng so, according to the Lar.
rowd Igstitute of Animal Economics.
Eperiments on the comparative val
e of grain and pasture, carried on at
the Institute's research farm, Red
ford, Michigan, amply backs up this
glatement,
““The recorq of cow No. 76 in 1924‘
find 1925 is typical of the results ob
tained In these experiments,” nu\tesl
the Institute. “This cow is an ordi
nary grade Holstein, and a pretty
good producer.
' Throughout the whole lactation in
1024, she was kept on a grain and hay
ration with lblgmcly no pasture,
Throughout the milking period she
produced an average of 3.6 gallons of
milk per day. At the end of the year's
lactafion she experienced a normal de
cline ih milk production. She was In
zplendid condition as a result of her
year-round graln ration, as she evi
denced by starting off her 1926 lacta
tion by producing up to 5.4 gallons of
milk per day, _ P
bR TN, 0, s, ANK (his, oo
went on pasture, For 10 days milk ‘
production, moved .up but after the.
first stimulus! of: the grass tohic wore
. she tall atiddily: Iwk as’ her
aifi ration Was redn"!}%hf"lfwb? iiodths
trer she Wbt on pdpgiive, 'sué wad
ei¥ing two pounds of grain per day.
er production has dropped from 4.6
gallons per day to 2.6 gallons. The
production continued to drop off un
ti} the 280 day when she was only
producing 1.1 gallons daily as against
almost 3 gallons daily in the previous
lactation at the same time.
No dairyman could dask for more
convincing proof that the reliance on
grasd alone is costly and that a reg
ular grain ration with pasture through
out the summer pays real dividends
in i production.”
zomlxs BEST PEACH CROP
Mdptgomery Advertiser: TR
e do not know who Mr. Jehn H:
d of Georgia is, but the virtuous
Masorr Telegraph assures us that he
is “one of the most conservative men
in Bhe industry,” and that “his suc
eeg‘*m been builded on hard-headed
buflnew methods characterized - by
ln#'rity." a4re
ig Mr. Baird, it seems, who
Joins bis fellow Georgians in declar
ing that this year's peach crop is the
finest he has seen in the 30 years
of his experience. What is of par
ticular interest is his opinion that
the peaches of this year’s crops are
of higher quality in every respect
than dny crop of peaches ever he--
fore grown in the state of Georgia
The Telegraph, though the cir
cumstances warrant an outbreak of
fervid editorial oratory, neverthe.-
less is judicious and restrained in ite
comment, hence plausible. That jour
nalisays. - Ry e
op is no mere happening. It is
e-thing to whi ers
W 8 been Wor\lfi?fufi%ny
g methods TR ARANE
“tifie methods -
nt has brought to the aid
o'tthe growers. AfY 'dp§ Who has
partaken of Georgia peaches
steddlily for six or sevep years -
cannot fail to be aware of their
increasing fine quality and to
the greater absence of rot and
worms and other enemies of
fruit. The growers themselves
have come to the realization
that success of the industry
comes from placing peaches on
the market, as placing the right
gort of fruit on the market. One
of the cheering indications of
the attitude is the fact that this
year's Mayflower crop is smaller
than it has ever been. The May- .
flower arriving first has been a
bad advertisement. for Georgia
peaches that followed.
That isn't all. The _cheering
thing about the situation now, saye
this same Telegraph “is that we
may talk about the uniform excel
lence of quality, rather than about
the size.” Indeed, “it may be said in
.perfect truth that Georgia is pro.
ducing this year a more nearly per.
fect peach crop” and that is the
message concetned in the industry
should get the public, the Telegrapk
thinks. '.
“The crop is large it is true—
oot i g TR
lieve we do not need this as a civie
improvement. And the work of thei
civic club is worth most where it fs
most needed. We sincerely hope the
wothen of the civic club will see this
THE CORDELE DISPATCH
ponsstvalive men hgye -estimated it
to be rising 13,000—but it is not toc
large, with iq excellent quality, tc
find markets if the quality is ex
plained.”
Well the Advertiser has done ite
part to explain the high quality of
Georgia's peaches in 1026, What we
want to know is, what @re Georgia'
peach growers going tofgle about it'.'g
. THE FUNDAMENTAL
IMPORTANCE 9? HOME
© Y OWNERSHIP )
Editor Clarence Poe in: The Progres:
sive Farmer: ' : \
f believe that ‘oux, county agents
and everybody else ought to carry
on a campaign for.home ownership
in the south beeauge it is the basis of
any worthy rural civilization. Next
to war, pestilence and famines, as
Dr. Thomas N. Carver has said, the
worst thing that can bapper §¢ §
rural community is absentee lanu-‘
lordism. A really strong and happy
rural comMunity must be one where
the land is farmed by men who own‘
and love it and who think of farm.
: : ’:- natoit ;;;‘ * v "':‘,; L y . P ERSL '1)9?(
f el O 19ave e o e A 5 5 Yaw lae
| 3 Lo fadl A b SOO Fa A SNTaT ¥
a 9 Drenii e \ £ 3 ) »
< iRV 3 .f,x | N\ , ‘ vt afdimigrg e
¢ : % 04 vl " .‘w":, “v' 1.'.'1! 3‘s 19 ”.l‘ ; b ” \ e
; 5 «§ ’ e.‘od 0l 8 i 910 \ il' ’ : i it aivw labhao
A ,‘ '“” Sy J & ‘ i o \‘ ¢ } Aee b'ya
NGy e A A %, C AMEL
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7N i A .
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Into one brand—Camel —we
‘;'; s‘:"‘ ‘ Ai‘ ‘ &\‘ ’(M At bog - :fi/ 1o 2y » : :4 | 7no o y !_lt"; “h'm')-wl ;
4 : .%_, S / g t 5 Bfeof ot boveirg od (liw anariis! i) 9ty 1 w:(’,'l'.u'! i
. B S il gmm 11 Igam | a 5 s o ; ¢ iy Y ftadiuod edd
- putthe utmost quality
Fe o o o i “ny (. Wi [ G touilt 10% atnslA
g’:’ aj :fl§&“‘. ],, L "'a“&. 2 Lend ade syodw : {ad )$ S ans L " ' s SiOVIRT) I 8
B! g RS e | Gt SR BT : ; wh ozls
ing it not only through their ‘own
lifetime but of handing it do,n to
their sons and their sons’ 'sons
growing in fertility and beauty by
the labors of each year and'wach
generation, and hallowed by all the
sentiments of family affection and
pride, The time has now come ‘when
we must get past the roving, pioneer
stage of American life when :,the
farmer could clear one farm, im
poverish it, and move on to angther:
there are no more new lands to ¢on
quer and the farmer of today should
say of his farm not merely that ‘lt
is my home,” but also that “K.ie
our family home,” something to be
kept by the family through the years
and te generations. &
HOW TO GET BETTER FARM
BUILDINGS
The Progressive Farmer:
No, you can’t do it all in one
year. So often you plan, “Well, next
year I'll paint the house, rebuild the
barn, build wife a chicken house
and also build an implement shed.
Next year never comes. Let’s do
»Tl-mia,ngest tobacco organization
“ify the world makes one cigarette—
Camel. Into this one brand goes
all of the desire to please, all of the
skill to serve of the world’s largest
organization of tobacco experts.
+./The day Camel went on the mat
ket, it found favor with smOEéési
Each year new millions have "ac
claimed it the one and only smoke.
' Never before or since in the histery
of smoking has there beenas
Only a cigarette of uttost
quality could make and keep- so
many millions of friends. On’ly a
R. J. Reynolda Tobacco.Cotipany, Winston-Salem, N. C,
part of it this year. Let’s set aside a
few acres of cotton from which the
revelue ig specifically to be used for
making life more liviable around the
house.
We believe you should have. a#
large:a farm as yoy have the braing
to-operate, but we also believe that
you will get ultimately more happi.
ness jand more contentment out of
life if you will plan to have an at
tractive farm home, and well plan.
ned out-buildings, all painted a uni
form color, Attractive farm buildinge!
will agt as a stimulus to our energy.
/Pride will_be a big factor in stimu.
lating .your desire to acquire more
land and become a really prosper-
R Py
R —————————
THE MULSHING OF MENCKEN
St. Louis Post-Dispateh:
The Man Mencken is slipping. He is
beginning to worry about the rest of
us. He is distressed at the way we
waste our time. He wants to do us
good. He would lead ue from futili
ty into worth-while hobbies.
Recreationally, golf is his pet
cigarette containing the choicest
tobaccos grown could merit world
leadership in cigarette sales.
Camel tobaccos are the finest—
and they are so carefully blended
that they never tire the taste, no
matter how liberally you smoke
them, Camels never leave a ciga
retty after-taste, - ! vel
We believe ‘you will find in
Camels the thrill of. pleasure that
only the: world’s finest and best
can give.- We invite you to com
pare Camels with any cigarette
made, at any price, .
Have a Camel! -
TUESDAY, JUNE 1, 1926
abomination. First he suggested that
we drop the mashies and _take dp
the fiddle and the bow. He recited
his own experience with music. A
‘dandy testimonial, too. But it fell
flat. Now he proposes science.
Chuck the fairways he says, Flock to
the laboratories. Beard the. microbe
in his den, the deadly germ in hie
Jair. It is great sport, he assures us.
And besides the kick he intimates
the pursuit of such a fad, with wi
’cx:obes and patients, would enlb‘l'“
to render (0, vilest of all prese !
words) service. . i
Is the man about to remounce his
cherished heresies? Is' Mencken to
turn traitor to Mencken?' Wil he
presently blossom forth i all the re
galia of & reformer? Is the- Balti
more terror to finish as a Maryland
terrapin—in the soup? -
Whed You TRk ©Of .
FIRE INSURANCE
STk THINK OF 9
JOHN WARD '
_ Make Him Smile That's All
Offica: Citizens Bank Bldg., Room @